Tasmin Little Plays British Violin Concertos Tasmin Little, BBC Philharmonic Orchestra & Sir Andrew Davis

Album info

Album-Release:
2015

HRA-Release:
11.05.2022

Label: Chandos

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Concertos

Artist: Tasmin Little, BBC Philharmonic Orchestra & Sir Andrew Davis

Composer: Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875–1912), Frederick Delius (1862–1934), Haydn Wood (1882–1959)

Album including Album cover

?

Formats & Prices

FormatPriceIn CartBuy
FLAC 96 $ 8.80
  • Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875 - 1912): Violin Concerto in G Minor, Op. 80:
  • 1Coleridge-Taylor: Violin Concerto in G Minor, Op. 80: I. Allegro maestoso11:35
  • 2Coleridge-Taylor: Violin Concerto in G Minor, Op. 80: II. Andante semplice09:19
  • 3Coleridge-Taylor: Violin Concerto in G Minor, Op. 80: III. Allegro molto11:09
  • Frederick Delius (1862 - 1934): Suite for Violin and Orchestra:
  • 4Delius: Suite for Violin and Orchestra: I. Pastorale. Andante quasi Allegretto05:38
  • 5Delius: Suite for Violin and Orchestra: II. Intermezzo. Allegro molto vivace03:04
  • 6Delius: Suite for Violin and Orchestra: III. Élégie. Adagio cantabile05:20
  • 7Delius: Suite for Violin and Orchestra: IV. Finale. Allegro animato04:41
  • Haydn Wood (1882 - 1959): Violin Concerto in A Minor:
  • 8Wood: Violin Concerto in A Minor: I. Allegro moderato11:31
  • 9Wood: Violin Concerto in A Minor: II. Andante sostenuto08:17
  • 10Wood: Violin Concerto in A Minor: III. Finale. Allegro giocoso07:06
  • Total Runtime01:17:40

Info for Tasmin Little Plays British Violin Concertos



Following on from the acclaimed Elgar and Moeran concertos, Tasmin Little and Sir Andrew Davis continue their special affinity for British music with this exciting new recording featuring the music of Coleridge-Taylor, Wood, and Delius.

Born in England of an English mother and a Sierra Leonean father, Coleridge-Taylor was much revered as a composer, dubbed ‘the black Mahler’ in the US in his later years. He was commissioned to write a violin concerto in 1910 for the Norfolk Festival in Connecticut and responded with a work based on several spirituals. After submitting it, he decided to completely rewrite it, concluding that the new one was ‘ten thousand times better than the other’. The premiere in 1912 – delayed because scores had gone astray – met with critical acclaim. The composer died a few months later. Like his predecessor Coleridge-Taylor, Haydn Wood studied violin at the Royal College of Music and composition with Sir Charles Stanford. This concerto is his only surviving one for violin. The high-romantic expression of the first movement is followed by a virtually continuous stream of lyrical melody in the second, and a full-blooded finale that at the same time is light and lively.

This album also features a Suite of four short character pieces by Delius, in the spirit of the Lyric Pieces for piano by his friend and mentor Edvard Grieg.

"Besides the stellar quality of Little's playing (as ever, warmly engaging and technically bombproof), Sir Andrew Davis and the BBC Philharmonic provide accompaniments in a special class. The slow movements of Wood's Concerto opens with a long theme for the principal horn, delivered here with spellbinding loveliness" (BBC Music Magazine)

"[The Delius is] an odd mix of movements, three looking forward to the music that would come a few years later while the fourth seems to have strayed in from from some forgotten work by Mendelssohn or Max Bruch. Little pays it just as much careful attention as the other two equally unfamiliar works on her disc." (The Guardian)

Tasmin Little, violin
BBC Philharmonic
Sir Andrew Davis, conductor



Tasmin Little
In 2008, Tasmin Little was the subject of a television documentary by the prestigious South Bank Show, which followed her ground-breaking project "The Naked Violin".

This ambitious project, which boldly embraced the internet and offered up a free downloadable recital of works for solo violin, achieved phenomenal success after its release in 2008 and was widely hailed as 'revolutionary' and 'inspiring'. It included an on-going series of workshops and concerts around the UK, and created an extraordinary volume of media interest in newspapers, on television, radio and the internet. Within days of the release of The Naked Violin there were over 6000 international websites linked to Tasmin's site, all talking about the pioneering aspect of the download and her ability to promote the value of music to all corners of society. Tasmin received the 2008 Classic FM Gramophone Award for Audience Innovation for this project at the Dorchester, London, on September 25th 2008.

Tasmin has played with many of the world's greatest orchestras in a career that has taken her to every continent. In addition to her regular solo performances, she has play/directed orchestras such as Royal Philharmonic, Seattle Symphony, London Mozart Players, English Chamber Orchestra, Norwegian Chamber, European Union Chamber Orchestra and Britten Sinfonia. In 2007/08 she joined the London Mozart Players as soloist and director in a tour of the UK which also featured her UK conducting debut.

Tasmin’s performances in the 2011/12 season took her back to the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam for a performance of Dritte Musik by Rihm, and she gave three concerto performances in London at the South Bank, Cadogan Hall and the Barbican. She returned to China, Singapore, Dublin and Philadelphia, made her debut in Dubai in December and in March 2012 she gave the World Premiere of the completed version of Roxanna Panufnik’s Four World Seasons with the London Mozart Players. This live National broadcast on BBC Radio 3 was opening concert of the Music Nation weekend, marking the beginning of the cultural events leading up to the London 2012 Olympic Games. Forthcoming performances in 2012/13 include her debuts with St Louis Symphony and Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra and her return to Warsaw for two performances of the Brahms violin concerto, return performances in Perth and Tasmania, her second curation of a 3-day festival of chamber music at London’s Kings Place, a celebrity recital in Manchester’s Bridgewater Hall with Martin Roscoe, performances in London’s South Bank Centre and five recording projects for Chandos Records.

In 2011, Tasmin made her seventeenth appearance at the BBC Promenade Concerts in the Royal Albert Hall, London, in a performance of the Elgar Violin Concerto with Sir Andrew Davis and the BBC Symphony Orchestra. In 2012, she will appear twice at the Proms, in a performance of Delius violin concerto with Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Vasily Petrenko, and at the “Musical Marvels” Wallace and Gromit Prom with Nicholas Collon and the Aurora Orchestra. She continues to champion seldom-performed repertoire and has received critical acclaim as one of the few violinists to have mastered Ligeti's challenging violin concerto. Her 2003 tour with the Berlin Philharmonic and Sir Simon Rattle, during which she performed the concerto at the Proms, Berlin Philharmonie, the Salzburg Festival, New York's Carnegie Hall and Philadelphia's Kimmel Center, received unanimous critical acclaim ('the technical command was glorious' ­ The Guardian; 'very beautiful' ­ Berliner Morgenpost; 'a major violin talent' ­ Philadelphia Inquirer; 'a formidable soloist' ­ New York Times). In 2007 she returned to the work with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra and at the Concertgebouw, Amsterdam.

In 2006, Tasmin was Artistic Director of her hugely successful 'Delius Inspired' Festival, which was broadcast for an entire week on BBC Radio 3 in July. An exciting range of events, ranging from orchestral concerts and chamber music to films and exhibitions, also reached 800 school children in an ambitious programme designed to widen interest in classical music for young people. She was Artistic Director of Spring Sounds Festival from 2008 until 2010. In April 2012, to celebrate the 150th year since Delius' birth, Tasmin, as a leading exponent of this composer's music, was invited to appear on BBC Radio 3 "Composer of the Week" featuring Delius, where she discussed the life and music of the composer.

Her discography reflects her wide-ranging repertoire and includes twenty-five recordings, ranging from Bruch and Brahms to Karlowicz and Arvo Pärt. Her recording of all the four Delius Violin Sonatas with Piers Lane won the prized Diapason d'Or. In March 2009 she released the disc 'Partners in Time', her follow-up to The Naked Violin, and in Autumn 2010 her long-awaited recording of the Elgar violin concerto was released on the Chandos label to unanimous critical acclaim. The recording celebrated the 100th anniversary of the concerto’s premiere and included a re-creation of a special version of the accompanied cadenza. Tasmin won the much-coveted "Critic's Choice" award for the Elgar disc at the May 2011 Classic BRIT Awards Ceremony.

Tasmin Little is an Ambassador for The Prince’s Foundation for Children and the Arts, is a Fellow of the Guildhall of Music and Drama, is President of ESTA (European String Teachers Association), an Ambassador for Youth Music, and has received Honorary Degrees from the Universities of Bradford, Leicester, Hertfordshire and City of London. In 2009, she received a prestigious Gold Badge Award for services to music.

She plays a 1757 Guadagnini violin and has, on kind loan from the Royal Academy of Music, the 'Regent' Stradivarius of 1708.

In June 2012, Tasmin Little was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Birthday Honours List, for services to music.

This album contains no booklet.

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO